Return Value

Returns a valid device ID that is > 0 on success or 0 on failure; call SDL_GetError() for more information.

For compatibility with SDL 1.2, this will never return 1, since SDL reserves that ID for the legacy SDL_OpenAudio() function.

Code Examples

SDL_AudioSpecwant,have;SDL_AudioDeviceIDdev;SDL_memset(&want,0,sizeof(want));/* or SDL_zero(want) */want.freq=48000;want.format=AUDIO_F32;want.channels=2;want.samples=4096;want.callback=MyAudioCallback;/* you wrote this function elsewhere -- see SDL_AudioSpec for details */dev=SDL_OpenAudioDevice(NULL,0,&want,&have,SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FORMAT_CHANGE);if(dev==0){SDL_Log("Failed to open audio: %s",SDL_GetError());}else{if(have.format!=want.format){/* we let this one thing change. */SDL_Log("We didn't get Float32 audio format.");}SDL_PauseAudioDevice(dev,0);/* start audio playing. */SDL_Delay(5000);/* let the audio callback play some sound for 5 seconds. */SDL_CloseAudioDevice(dev);}

Remarks

SDL_OpenAudio(), unlike this function, always acts on device ID 1. As such, this function will never return a 1 so as not to conflict with the legacy function.

Please note that SDL 2.0 before 2.0.5 did not support recording; as such, this function was failing if iscapture was not zero. Starting with SDL 2.0.5 recording is implemented and this value can be non-zero.

Passing in a device name of NULL requests the most reasonable default (and is equivalent to what SDL_OpenAudio() does to choose a device). The device name is a UTF-8 string reported by SDL_GetAudioDeviceName(), but some drivers allow arbitrary and driver-specific strings, such as a hostname/IP address for a remote audio server, or a filename in the diskaudio driver.

allowed_changes can have the following flags OR'd together:

SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FREQUENCY_CHANGE

SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FORMAT_CHANGE

SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_CHANNELS_CHANGE

SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_ANY_CHANGE

These flags specify how SDL should behave when a device cannot offer a specific feature. If the application requests a feature that the hardware doesn't offer, SDL will always try to get the closest equivalent.

For example, if you ask for float32 audio format, but the sound card only supports int16, SDL will set the hardware to int16. If you had set SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FORMAT_CHANGE, SDL will change the format in the obtained structure. If that flag was not set, SDL will prepare to convert your callback's float32 audio to int16 before feeding it to the hardware and will keep the originally requested format in the obtained structure.

If your application can only handle one specific data format, pass a zero for allowed_changes and let SDL transparently handle any differences.

An opened audio device starts out paused, and should be enabled for playing by calling SDL_PauseAudioDevice(devid, 0) when you are ready for your audio callback function to be called. Since the audio driver may modify the requested size of the audio buffer, you should allocate any local mixing buffers after you open the audio device.

The audio callback runs in a separate thread in most cases; you can prevent race conditions between your callback and other threads without fully pausing playback with SDL_LockAudioDevice(). For more information about the callback, see SDL_AudioSpec.